Fire and CivilizationAllen Lane, 1992 - 247 من الصفحات Fire is a destructive force. It is also a great purveyor of the advancement of human life. In an exploration of this dichotomy, Goudsblom investigates man and his realtionship to--and fascination with--combustion from every possible perspective--historical, archaeological, anthropological, psychological, biological, ecological, and sociological--illuminating the legacy of fire on world history. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 19
الصفحة 86
... destruction - even if the associations were not very realistic , as in Isaiah's vision of the destruction of Assyria : ' And the light of Israel shall be for a fire , and his Holy One for a flame : and it shall burn and devour his ...
... destruction - even if the associations were not very realistic , as in Isaiah's vision of the destruction of Assyria : ' And the light of Israel shall be for a fire , and his Holy One for a flame : and it shall burn and devour his ...
الصفحة 183
... destruction because it had a late - medieval town centre consisting mainly of highly flammable wooden houses . The desired effect was indeed attained : after a few hours of intensive bombing , 80 per cent of the old city burned down ...
... destruction because it had a late - medieval town centre consisting mainly of highly flammable wooden houses . The desired effect was indeed attained : after a few hours of intensive bombing , 80 per cent of the old city burned down ...
الصفحة 202
... destruction , and especially towards destruction by fire . This ambivalence seems to be present in every culture . It is probably as old as the domestication of fire itself . The main reason why our early ancestors went to the trouble ...
... destruction , and especially towards destruction by fire . This ambivalence seems to be present in every culture . It is probably as old as the domestication of fire itself . The main reason why our early ancestors went to the trouble ...
المحتوى
Fire Civilization The domestication of fire as a civilizing process Plan | 8 |
The stage of predominantly passive use of fire The transition to active use of fire | 20 |
The widening gap between humans and other animals Clearing land Cooking | 37 |
حقوق النشر | |
10 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
According agrarian societies altar ancient animals anthropologist archaeologist arson became behaviour bush caused chimpanzees civilizing campaign civilizing process combustion conflagrations continued control fire control of fire control over fire cooking cultivation cultural destruction domestication of fire dominant early ecological effect Elias Elijah Empire energy fire brigade fire regime flames force forest fuel gathering and hunting Greek fire handling fire Hanunóo Hattusa hearth heat Hephaestus Herodotus Hesiod Hestia highly historian hominids Homo erectus houses human groups Iliad incendiarism increasing increasingly individual industrial intensive growth Israel Israelites Jones land later learned light living long run Lord military military-agrarian modern Molech natural Norbert Elias nuclear fusion Odysseus organization peasants Perlès population priests problem production pyrophytes religion Roman Rome set fire Shifting Cultivation slash and burn smoke social socio-cultural steam technical temple towns trend twentieth century urban weapons Western Europe wood